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The phrase "as giving a large" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to describe an action or effect related to providing something substantial, but it lacks clarity and completeness.
Example: "The report was seen as giving a large insight into the company's future."
Alternatives: "as providing a significant" or "as offering a considerable".
Exact(1)
"TED-Ed was founded as a way of empowering teachers, as well as giving a large platform for great teachers to produce their talks or lessons on video for the world," he added.
Similar(59)
But he added, "You're better off to target three, four or five charities and give larger gifts to a small number of charities as opposed to giving a large number of small checks".
As well as giving a launch date, Cook announced a large expansion in support for the service, both at the banks' and the merchants' end.
The basic version of the original problem is as follows: given a (large) set of items, a predicate, and a number k, use humans to find k items from the given set that satisfy a given predicate.
Her earliest political memory, she has said, is of being taken to the anti-Iraq war rally as a child and given a large lollipop.
In 1852, five years after its founding as the Free Academy, City College was given a large gift of 24 casts of marble sculptures in the Parthenon in Athens.
Therefore, each edge is interpretable as the posterior probability, given a large compendium of empirical data collected from human-derived samples, that two genes work together to carry out a specific biological process.
The Kremlin-funded club, known in Russian as Nochnye Volki, had been given a large plot of land near Sevastopol in Crimea.
As Conway remarked: "It's probable, given a large enough Life space, initially in a random state, that after a long time, intelligent, self-reproducing animals will emerge and populate some parts of the space" (cited in Ilachinski 2001, p. 131).
While research has found that men generally do better with map reading and finding their way around unfamiliar territory due to a slight evolutionary edge in spatial relations, a new study has shown that women can wend their way through simulated 3-D computer environments just as well as men can when given a larger field of view and smoother animation.
The genotype of this strain, called MA159G, was confirmed by PCR of genomic DNA, with primers MA0334 and MA0335 (which amplify hisS Pcar_1041 but not hisS GSU1659) as well as MA0330 and MA0333 (which give a larger product for MA159G than for DL1, due to the inserted marker).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com